Jehuda Bacon

Jehuda Bacon, visual artist and professor emeritus of visual arts, is a Prague emigrant who arrived in Palestine at the age of sixteen. He first came in contact with Kestenberg on the
recommendation of the Czech educator and humanist Premysl
Pitter, Kestenberg's friend from his time in Prague. Bacon soon came to esteem Kestenberg as an older friend and as a mentor. He also developed a friendly relationship with
Kestenberg's daughter, Ruth Kestenberg-Gladstein, for whose daughter Rachel he was a babysitter..

Bacon, who did not take a musical path, had from the start another perspective on the musician, music educator and music policymaker. As a friend of the family, he experienced "Prof.
Kestenberg" not only among his students, as an integral member of that educational circle, but also as a fellow émigré and friend.

Kestenberg's circle of friends in Palestine included the publisher Max Brod, the historian Hugo Bergmann and the philosophers of religion Martin Buber and Gershom Sholem. As a youth in
Prague, Bacon had already been introduced to this circle. Now he renewed these acquaintanceships - not least thanks to Kestenberg's daughter, Ruth.

The religious and cultural philosophical themes discussed in these circles, e.g. the spiritual roots of Judaism, would be of major significance for Bacon's subsequent artistic
development.

1929 Born into an observant Jewish family of Hasidic descent in Moravian
Ostrau (today Ostrava, Czech Republic)
1942 Deported to Theresienstadt with his parents and one of his sisters

late 1943 Deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau

early 1945 Endures "evacuation march" to Mauthausen concentration camp and on to the camp at

Gunskirchen; there liberated by American soldiers
1945 Private pupil of Prof. Willy Nowak at the Art Academy in Prague

1946 Emigrates to Palestine

1946-51 Student of Mordechai Ardon at the Bezalel Art Academy in Jerusalem. Through a letter of

introduction he brings from Prague, meets Leo Kestenberg

1951-59 Art teacher at the Brandeis School in Jerusalem, travel and study in Europe at the Central School

of Art in London and the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris
1959-94 Professor of graphics and drawing at the Central School of Art in London 1971-73 Advanced

study at the Pratt Institute Graphics Center in New York
1976-77 Art instructor at the University of Haifa
1994 Emeritus status; active since as a freelancer

Numerous solo and group exhibitions in Israel, Europe, South Africa and the USA.

Works in public collections: Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Yad Vashem Museum, Jerusalem; Ministry of Culture Israel; Haifa Museum of Modern Art; Eilat Museum of Modern Art; Ein-Harod Museum of Modern
Art; Cape Town University Library; The Library of Congress, Washington; the British Museum, London; Ben Uri Collection, London.